Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson 1572-1637) was an early modern playwright whose popularity rivaled that of Shakespeare or Marlowe. He spent multiple stints in prison, wrote masques in which the Queen of England and Prince of Wales performed, and was crowned England's first poet laureate.
Yet for all this in 1572 he was born into relative poverty. His father died shortly before his birth, and his mother remarried a bricklayer. Luckily for the clever young boy, an unidentified friend paid for Jonson to attend Westminster School. After leaving school Jonson attempted to join his stepfather as a bricklayer, but the profession didn't take; legend has it young Ben recited Homer while building the walls of Lincoln Inn. In the 1590s Jonson served in the armed forces in the Low Countries, and in November 1594 Jonson married a woman he described as "a shrew, yet honest."
It's not certain when Jonson entered the theatre, but by 1597 he was an actor for the Admiral's Men. It was also in this year that his earliest surviving play, The Case is Altered, was performed by Pembroke's Company.
By George Vertue, after Gerard van Honthorst [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Too Witty for his Own…
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| # | Resource Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | Ben Johnson, 'The Alchemist' and Blackfrairs (transcript) | Pdf-transcript of lecture by Professor Andrew Gurr held on Monday, 6 February 1995 - 1:00pm at… | Andrew Gurr |
| 12 | Jonson 1616 folio Workes title page | Title page of Ben Jonson's 1616 folio edition of his collected poems and plays. | |
| 13 | Ben Jonson by George Vertue | By George Vertue after Gerard van Honthorst. | |
| 14 | Ben Jonson: Renaissance Playwright, Renaissance Man | Ben Jonson 1572-1637) was an early modern playwright whose popularity rivaled that of Shakespeare… | Kate O'Connor |
| 15 | Early Modern Drama on the Page and Stage | Many books and university courses, trying to compensate for a history of the neglect or mistrust of… | Emma Smith |
| 16 | The poems of Robert Greene, Christopher Marlowe, and Ben Jonson | ed., with notes, by R. Bell. |